Hello: Darrin Kirkland Jr.

According to multiple sources, including himself, Indianapolis (IN) Lawrence Central ILB Darrin Kirkland Jr. committed to Michigan while on an unofficial visit today. The Wolverines got in on Kirkland at just the right time; after Michigan offered in early April, he picked up subsequent offers from Texas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Oregon, and appeared on the verge of many more.

Kirkland originally planned to make a May 30th decision, but called that off after fielding the Texas offer. Once again, though, the coaches made a huge impact during a campus visit:

The importance of getting a prospect on campus. Darrin Kirkland Jr. said he didn't go up to Ann Arbor with plans to commit today.

"As soon as I saw the Block M on campus, I knew I was committing on this trip," Kirkland said. "I felt great about Michigan. My parents really like Michigan and I'm excited to be a part of the Michigan program."

Kirkland becomes the seventh member of the 2015 class and the first at linebacker.

GURU RATINGS

Scout

Rivals

ESPN

247

247 Comp

4*, #5 MLB,
#135 Ovr

4*, #6 ILB,
#183 Ovr

4*, 81, #7 ILB,
#256 Ovr

4*, 90, #7 ILB

4*, #5 ILB,
#194 Ovr

Kirkland is universally considered one of the top seven inside linebackers in his class, with the only variance being how highly each service considers that position group as a whole—the #5 ILB spot on Rivals puts him at #153 overall, while only the top four ILBs crack the Top247. Put it all together and Kirkland falls just within the top 200 prospects nationally.

The services are in general agreement about his size, with all but Rivals (6'1", 233 lbs.) listing him at 6'2" and 220-228 pounds, a very solid frame for a rising senior linebacker.

SCOUTING

What stands out most when reading Kirkland's scouting reports are the repeated mentions of his excellent instincts. Here's the free report from Scout, which lists discipline, instincts, and tackling technique as strengths with shedding ability as an area for improvement:

Very smart, instinctive player who always seems to be in good position and around the football. Takes good angles to the ball, rarely takes false steps and shows good closing ability. Has gotten stronger and thicker over the last year and needs to continue to do that. - Allen Trieu

Rivals analyst Josh Helmholdt noticed the same when he watched Kirkland and Lawrence Central take on eventual state runner-up Carmel last September, ranking him as the top underclassman prospect from a weekend featuring two big-time matchups ($):

It was a fast start for the Rivals250 to Watch presented by Under Armour prospect, as he tallied five tackles and a forced fumble in the first quarter. Kirkland was fairly quiet after that, however, although Lawrence Central's defense stayed stout throughout the game. Kirkland transferred to Lawrence Central from Park Tudor over the summer to play in the same linebacker corps as Lee, and they make a formidable duo. Kirkland will play a MIKE and a WILL role in Lawrence Central's defense, and he does both equally well. He has sideline-to-sideline speed and gets great depth in his pass drops. What stood out most in this game, however, was Kirkland's football IQ. His play recognition is well ahead of the others on that defense, and he sniffed out several counters and screen passes.

ESPN's profile features two evaluations—one from his junior season, and a longer evaluation done more recently—that had to be done by two different people. They agree that he's a forceful run-stopper who's better in confined space than the open field. Then we get incongruous statements like this from the first eval...

Closing burst is just average. Did not see explosive power at the point of attack or strong hands and take-on skills.

...and this from the more recent one:

Powers through blockers and scrapes well with square shoulder pads getting over and under blocks; closes off-tackle with deceptive burst for his size.

...

Explosive on his final steps of contact. Runs through ball carriers with good force.

They did agree that Kirkland's hand usage could be better. Then there's perhaps the biggest point of contention regarding his game—his ability in coverage. Here's ESPN again:

Can turn and get adequate depth in his zone drops while displaying a nose for the ball and the strength to collision and reroute shorter crossing routes. He does show some wasted motion breaking forward. We do not see the hip fluidity that projects well as a man-to-man linebacker at the college level. Shows limitations in space. Flashes good timing, closing burst and effort as a blitzer and appears to have more upside in this facet than in coverage on 3rd down.

While this doesn't totally answer the questions about Kirkland's man-to-man ability—especially in pads vs. no pads—247's J.C. Shurburtt repeated the praise for his ball skills after the 2013 Columbus NFTC:

This spring, at the Rivals camp in Columbus, Kirkland took home position MVP honors and the top ranking among defenders at the camp by once again showing off his coverage ability ($):

Kirkland proved to be the best linebacker in a loaded group. The Rivals250 member has excellent footwork and was putting on a clinic during the position drills portion for the camp. When it came time for one-on-ones, Kirkland stepped up to every challenger. He showed that he has the speed to run with any running back or tight end and was able to make some plays on the ball while it was in the air. Kirkland broke up a number of passes en route to winning the linebacker MVP award.

It sounds like Kirkland may have some limitations athletically, namely concerning his hip flexibility and straight-line speed, but he appears to make up for a lot of that with his technique and instincts.

Meanwhile, there's little question about what he can do as a run-stuffer. From 247's Clint Brewster's film evaluation ($):

Tackling 9

Kirkland Jr. doesn’t miss tackles and plays with his head up. Stays square and drives through the ball-carrier when he tackles. Good form and gets underneath his opponent.

Striking Ability 8

Shows nice explosive power when he makes contact and stays the attacker. Closes on the ball-carrier quickly.

Brewster concludes that while Kirkland is "not the most talented all around linebacker," he "does everything right and constantly diagnoses action correctly," then chooses for his player comparison... David Harris. Yes, please. I'll have another.

If everything above screams MIDDLE LINEBACKER to you, you're not alone. A squat, powerful run-stuffer with great instincts but perhaps not the most fluid athleticism is a MIKE until proven otherwise, and given his blitzing ability he should be able to fit there whether U-M sticks with the 4-3 over or goes back to an under front.

OFFERS

As mentioned above, Michigan got in on Kirkland just as he started to blow up on the recruiting trail. His other offers included Georgia Tech, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisville, Maryland, Mississippi, NC State, Nebraska, North Carolina, Northwestern, Oklahoma, Ole Miss, Oregon, Penn State, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia Tech, and Wisconsin.

According to TomVH, that list was likely to grow when Kirkland made his pledge:

Darrin Kirkland Jr had started to get some big offers and interest, it's a big deal for Michigan to get him now.

While U-M may have to sweat out Kirkland fielding prestigious offers until Signing Day, the fact that he committed despite recent offers from the likes of Oklahoma, Oregon, and Texas—the last of which he called a "game changer" when it came through in late April—is a very good sign.

HIGH SCHOOL

Lawrence Central plays in Indiana's largest division, and they've been a relatively successful program in recent years, winning the state championship in 2012. Kirkland transferred to LC for the 2013 season, and after losing several key pieces they fell to a 3-7 record last season.

Kirkland is the first four-star produced by the school in the Rivals era. The most prominent prospect to come out of the school in recent years is current Indiana quarterback Tre Roberson.

STATS

Kirkland recorded 110 tackles and eight sacks en route to All-State honors in 2013, per 247.

FAKE 40 TIME

Kirkland supposedly ran a 4.58 at Louisville's camp last summer, though it's unclear whether that's hand-timed or electronic. That'd be quite fast for a linebacker his size, though he does display impressive burst; I'll give it three FAKEs out of five.

With Michigan's glut of linebacker prospects from recent classes, Kirkland will almost certainly be afforded a redshirt year in 2015, when the open spots vacated by Jake Ryan and Desmond Morgan will be competed for by Ben Gedeon, Joe Bolden, Michael Ferns, and Ben Gedeon, in all likelihood.

With Kirkland slotting in to the MIKE spot, he's either going to have to beat out an older player or wait his turn for a couple years before grabbing a starting spot. Program depth is a beautiful thing. He certainly has the size and instincts necessary to play early if necessary, though, so don't rule out the possibilty that he grabs some early PT.

UPSHOT FOR THE REST OF THE CLASS

Michigan now has seven commits in the 2015 class and, according to our count, five scholarships remaining—that number will assuredly grow by NSD. With Kirkland in the fold, they're set at inside linebacker. Positions of need moving forward include running back, receiver, tight end, offensive tackle, weakside DE, and outside linebacker; Michigan may also look to add another defensive back if Shaun Crawford eventually decommits, though the need there isn't huge either way.

On-visit commits seem to be the most precarious. Not that I feel these coaches did anything to deceive, but everyone's emotional and fickle at that age. Other coaches (like THAT guy from THAT place) don't know when to quit and will only push harder. Sometimes they're successful.

If this kid's decided then great! Not only does the team get a good player, he's picked a good school. But I never feel these sorts of post-visit decisions are final until Signing Day. Nothing personal but they don't seem to carry the weight of "I've decided, I'm done, now leave me the hell alone" announcements made on one's own time.

I also think he's been to campus several times (I don't know the count; perhaps Brandon does). Seems he just felt like shutting it down after the last of many repeated visits. Things can always change, as this group well knows. Yet with thoughts on helping recruiting and the BBQ coming up, I would think he'll stay in in the fold.

But you said this in the other thread just a couple of minutes ago: "Kirkland looks kind of small on film and his competition is absolutely atrocious. Still happy for the commitment but I'm taking him with a grain of salt."

So which is it— are you happy that Michigan has gotten a "top player," or do you think that Kirkland's commitment is no big deal?

If what I am being told is true, about Kirkland's conference being the best in IN, then I am happy because he dominated it. Have you seen his film though? The kids look so bad, sometimes they're like 5'2". Either way I am happy with some good news on a good Sunday.

As far as their conference goes, then yes, they do play in the best conference in Indiana. But they just joined that conference last year, and went 3-7. They won a state championship in 2012, going 15-0, but played in a weaker conference. They definitely struggled a bit last year....also, I'm not sure how much of his tape is from last season.

Time for me to take off my receptionist skirt and put on my Barbara Streisand in the Prince Of Tides ass-masking therapist pantsuit

My son is teammates with Darrin @ LC. As an LC football parent & diehard Michigan fan I am extremely excited for his commitment. Watched him play his first season @LC last year & this kid is a beast on the field. I don't know what films everyone is looking at but to say he's small in stature suggests they are misleading. As far as LC's record in the new conference, I can see where some may be concerned. What they don't know is that our starting QB was sidelined with an injury during our first game and sat out the entire season. Our backup QB and O line was horrible. Michigan fans can relate. Our D line was top in the state & kept this team from imploding on themselves. With all of our players healthy now, Im excited to see what this season will bring. Be sure to check out this years highlights & there will be no doubts that this was a great pick up for Michigan.

is hilliard from ohio? i recall watching highlight tape someone posted here of some ohio LB and he looked really impressive to me. forgot the name but hilliard sounds right. im sure this kid kirkland will be solid addition, good for him, free ride to ball and study at um. but that good LB from ohio i saw on here while ago would be great pick up, he looked really athletic on that tape

They'll play different positions in college. Hilliard is a WILL in an under and likely a SAM (but possibly a WILL) in an Over, whereas Kirkland is a true MIKE. Hilliard is considered one of the top LBs in the nation.

Is about as MIKE of a MIKE LB as you can get. Thick, squaty, solidly built from head to toe and shoulder to shoulder. If Michigan sticks in the over scheme, this is the type of LB you want playing MIKE and taking on blockers at the point of attack. He's going to plug a lot of running lanes and filter the football to a lot of the other talented LBs that are surrounding him.

Not the greatest athlete at LB from this year's crop, but he plays the game very physical. He'll be great between the tackles, and should have enough speed to chase behind the play without being a natural slicer. Great fit for MIKE.

Supposedly the coaches wanted him as a MIKE, but I see him more as an OLB, probably a WILL then a SAM in that order, but it's not a huge difference and they could build him to play at either position.

But he's more of a slasher, a bit better of an athlete, but not as solid of a build as Kirkland and doesn't do as well taking on blockers at this point (not unusual for High School LBs that are so much more athletic than the guys trying to block them).